In the 1970s, Brill created a design that would become the industry standard — a propulsion system that prevented communications satellites from slipping out of orbit. President Barack Obama gave her an award in 2011 for her groundbreaking work.

But the beginning of the obituary that ran in Saturday's New York Times made no mention of that accomplishment. Instead, obit writer Douglas Martin's tribute focused on her skills as a mother and a woman in the kitchen.

"She made a mean beef stroganoff, followed her husband from job to job and took eight years off from work to raise three children," read the opening sentence.

"There's still a gender gap in the sciences, with far fewer women than men in research jobs, and those women earning substantially less, but it doesn’t help when journalists treat every female scientist they profile as an archetype of perseverance," wrote Curtis Brainard for CJR.